Paracholia

Paracholia is a Greek word meaning "bile yolk". This concept became known thanks to the ancient Greek physician Hippocrates. In his work Hippocratica, he described several cases of paracholia in which patients suffered from hallucinations accompanied by vivid visual and auditory impressions.

In modern language, paracholia is usually called uncontrolled involvement in the process of creating a work, especially of psychogenic origin, characterized by the brightness of vision and the strength of experiences due to the self-capture of the main creative idea, which can only be overcome through an effort of will, a conflict with an internal demon, or the cessation of creativity.

Paracholia is a sign of such a type of psyche as schizoid. The schizoid personality is prone to abstraction, characterized by eccentricity and unusual thinking (Bleikher O.K., Kruk I.I. Explanatory dictionary of psychiatric terms. - Voronezh: MODEK, 2013. - 639 p.). His emotions are superficial and overly acute.

One of the main concepts of paracholia is that people often feel the desire to create a new world or change it. They may strive to create art, music, or scientific discoveries.

The second concept of paracholia is that paracholics have the ability to create something that does not exist in the real world. This ability allows them to find new ways of understanding the world and work with subtle matters. Paracholics can use this ability to manipulate reality and create new worlds.

But regardless of which concept is correct, we can say that paracholics tend to be creative and search for new ways of expressing thoughts. These properties allow them to create something that did not exist before, as well as influence reality.